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Overview of Information on H1N1 influenza (Swine Flu)

The swine flu was declared a global pandemic on June 11, 2009, in the first designation by the World Health Organization of a worldwide pandemic in 41 years.

The heightened alert came after an emergency meeting with flu experts in Geneva that convened after a sharp rise in cases in Australia, and rising numbers in Britain, Japan, Chile and elsewhere.

But the pandemic is "moderate" in severity, according to Margaret Chan, the organization's director general, with the overwhelming majority of patients experiencing only mild symptoms and a full recovery, often in the absence of any medical treatment.

The virus is now widespread in the United States and continues to spread from one country to another, and the W.H.O. has recommended against attempts to contain it, arguing that it has already spread too widely.

Many experts have been questioning whether the new strain of flu is deadlier than normal seasonal flu. But as the disease moves into the developing world, where rates of chronic disease are high and health systems typically poor, Dr. Chan said, "it is prudent to anticipate a bleaker picture." A number of countries, particularly China, had been taking rigorous quarantine measures against Mexicans or people who had traveled to Mexico.

ORIGINS

The origins of the flu, also known as the A (H1N1) strain, are unclear; it seems to have first surfaced in Mexico or the southwestern United States. The outbreak was first identified in Mexico, where health authorities became alarmed over the death of several young and healthy adults.

Mexico's first known case, which was later confirmed, was from Perote, in Veracruz State, according to Health Minister José Ángel Córdova. The case involved a 5-year-old boy named Edgar, who recovered.

On April 30, the W.H.O. said that it would stop referring to the virus as swine flu, after a number of countries banned pork imports or slaughtered pig hers, opting for the more clinical sounding A(H1N1). There is not yet any genetic proof that this strain of influenza ever came from a pig. The virus has pieces of North American swine, bird and human flus and of Eurasian swine flu, according to the C.D.C.

SYMPTOMS AND TRANSMISSION

The most common method of transmission is airborne, and it is also possible to become infected by touching a surface with the virus on it and then touching one's mouth or nose. The C.D.C. has advised people to wash their hands frequently, and also to avoid surfaces that might be contaminated.

Most people lack immunity to this new virus. But in one sign that the disease may not be as serious as feared, Mexican Health Minister José Ángel Córdova said that the flu, influenza A(H1N1), appears only slightly more contagious than the seasonal flu, less than thought. Each sufferer is, on average, passing the disease along to between 1.4 and 1.8 people, a statistic known as the R factor.

Among the many unknowns, perhaps the biggest is how deadly A(H1N1) will be.

Even a flu with a low percentage of lethality can cause a large number of deaths if vast swaths of populations are infected -- seasonal flus kill an estimated 250,000 to 500,000 people worldwide each year. This outbreak has caused concern because officials have never seen this particular strain of the flu passing among humans before, said Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

PANDEMIC VIRUSES

Some scientists are arguing that the H1N1 flu lacks some of the genetic earmarks of a highly lethal strain. However, as it circulates in humans, especially in the Southern Hemisphere winter, the virus could pick up dangerous human flu genes.

Much of the intiial worry concerned the ages of the victims in Mexico. Unlike typical flu seasons, when infants and the aged are the most vulnerable, none of the initial deaths in Mexico were in people older than 60 or younger than 3, a spokeswoman with the World Health Organization said.

Pandemic flus -- like the 1918 flu and outbreaks in 1957 and 1968 -- often strike young, healthy people the hardest. This flu strain it appears to infect an unusually high percentage of young people. The median age of patients is 17.

The sudden detection of the new virus occurred just as scientists were focusing on behavioral changes observed in another virus, the A(H5N1) bird flu strain, in Egypt. Virologists have tracked the avian virus since its discovery in Hong Kong in 1997.

The avian flu has kept world health authorities anxious for years because 257 of the 421 people who contracted it died, or 61 percent. But it has shown very little ability to pass from person to person, mainly infecting poultry, and some experts have suggested that there may be something about the H5N1 virus that makes it inherently less transmissible among people.

As a benchmark, the deadliest influenza pandemic in the past century, the Spanish influenza of 1918 to 1919, had an estimated mortality rate of around 2.5 percent but killed tens of millions of people because it spread so widely. Many of those lives would have been saved if anti-flu drugs, antibiotics and mechanical ventilators had existed.

The virus that caused widespread panic in Asia in 2003, SARS -- severe acute respiratory syndrome -- is both easily spread and virulent. In the 2003 outbreak in Hong Kong, it killed 299 of the 1,755 people infected, or 17 percent.

RESPONSE FROM PUBLIC HEALTH OFFICIALS

Health authorities around the world took extraordinary measures to combat the epidemic and mitigate its effects as it quickly spread across the globe in late April and early May 2009. The W.H.O. raised its alert level on H1N1 flu to Phase 5 on April 29, based on the flu's continuing spread in the United States and Mexico. It is the first time that Phase 5, the next-to-highest level, has been declared since the W.H.O. system was introduced in 2005 in response to the avian influenza crisis.

Phase 6 means a pandemic is underway. A W.H.O. spokesman, Dick Thompson, said in mid-May that there was still not enough evidence to conclude that the disease was spreading in a sustained way outside of North America, which would be required for the organization to raise its pandemic alert level to 6.

Britain, Japan and other nations have urged the W.H.O. to change the way it decides to declare a pandemic - saying the agency must consider how deadly the virus is, not just how fast it is spreading. There has been concern that by raising the global alert level to 5, the United Nations health agency had unduly raised alarm.

International health experts, who say the epidemic will spread regardless of attempts at containment, advised against closing borders. They encouraged governments to focus on mitigating the disease's spread through public health measures.

For the W.H.O., the approach is an about-face from the strategy that has contained the H5N1 avian flu, which has caused fewer than 300 deaths. The avian flu was contained in 1997 by killing every chicken in Hong Kong, and later cases have been met with aggressive efforts at culling nearby birds and vaccinating poultry in a ring around them.

Many countries ignored the advice against containment efforts, leading to a welter of bans, advisories and alerts on certain pork products. In China, authorities quarantined Mexican travelers in hospitals and hotels - many of whom had shown no sign of illness.

Mexico City, one of the world's largest cities, closed schools, gyms, swimming pools, restaurants and movie theaters. Mexicans donned masks for protection outdoors. Mexican officials said on May 4 that they would lower the public alert against the virus and allow most of the nation's businesses to reopen.

THE VIRUS IN NEW YORK CITY

In the early days of the swine flu outbreak in the United States the cases were concentrated in New York City. The city's first reported cases were diagnosed in late April 2009 among teenagers from a high school in Queens who had traveled to Mexico for spring break.

In the following weeks the public schools seemed to become an incubator for the flu, and numerous facilities were closed. But after an early period of high alert when the virus was first detected, officials toned down their concern.

On May 17, Mitchell Wiener, the assistant principal at a school in Queens, became the first person to die from the virus in New York. Health officials said that the death was not surprising, since even in a normal flu season, thousands of victims die of complications from the disease, and because he had a history of medical problems that may have put him at greater risk.

Some parents, school staff and teachers' union officials wondered whether the city was moving too slowly to close schools with high absenteeism.

FLU DRUGS

Federal officials said it would take until January, or late November at the earliest, to make enough vaccine to protect all Americans from a possible epidemic of the H1N1 flu. And beyond this nation and a few other countries that also make vaccines, it could take years to produce enough vaccine to satisfy global demand, health experts said.

Although the production of flu vaccine has increased, it may not fast enough to avert death and illness if the virus starts spreading widely and becomes more virulent, some experts said. Federal officials have not yet decided whether the flu threat warrants the production of more vaccine, but they are taking the initial steps. The problem is that production of a vaccine might interfere with the manufacture of seasonal flu vaccine for next winter.

There have been no immediate signs of any drug shortages. Roche, the Swiss maker of Tamiflu, said on May 1 that the W.H.O. has enough stockpiled to treat up to 5 million people, on top of millions more doses held by governments. Tamiflu has been stockpiled for years by governments, companies and health authorities. Still, manufacturers were increasing production and expressed anxiety that shortages could develop if governments placed huge orders. Mexican health officials said the virus responded to Tamiflu and other antiviral medications if administered shortly after the onset of flu.

6/23/09

Source
New York Times. June 21, 2009.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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